CIA and FBI Release New JFK Assassination Documents

National Archives unveils 441 never-before-seen records.

President John F. Kennedy and wife Jacquline ride up Broadway in New York City. (Photo by Frank Hurley/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)

President John F. Kennedy and wife Jacquline ride up Broadway in New York City. (Photo by Frank Hurley/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)

By Diana Crandall

Nearly 4,000 records associated with investigations into the assassination of President John F. Kennedy have been released by the National Archives, ABC News reports. Although most of the material had previously been released with parts redacted, there are 441 that have never before been made public.

In the materials, there are reportedly 17 recordings of interviews with former KGB agent Yuri Nosenko, who defected in 1964 and told authorities he was in charge of Lee Harvey Oswald’s KGB file while Oswald was in the Soviet Union.

There are also details relating to the murder of Martin Luther King Jr., who was assassinated in 1968, five years after President Kennedy was killed.

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